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Type to enter text Presented by: UMass Amherst Center for Heritage & Society www.umass.edu/chs MAY 14-16, 2014 AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST HERITAGE & HEALTHY SOCIETIES Exploring the links among cultural heritage, environment, and resilience

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Page 1: HERITAGE & HEALTHY SOCIETIES

Type to enter text

Presented by:UMass Amherst Center for Heritage & Society

www.umass.edu/chs

MAY 14-16, 2014 AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST

HERITAGE & HEALTHY SOCIETIESExploring the links among cultural heritage, environment, and resilience

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ORGANIZING TEAM

Elizabeth S. Chilton, Co-Organizer ([email protected])Matthew Hill, Co-Organizer ([email protected])Sophia Labadi, Co-Organizer ([email protected])Evan Taylor, Center for Heritage & Society Research Assistant ([email protected]) Grace Cleary, Center for Heritage & Society Research Assistant ([email protected])

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Sonya Atalay, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Felicity Aulino, Mellon Post-doctoral Fellow, Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Kathleen A. Brown-Pérez, MBA/JD (Brothertown Indian Nation), Assistant Professor, Commonwealth Honors College, Co-chair, Five College Native American Indian Studies Certi!cate Program, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Ethan Carr, Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture & Regional Planning, Center for Heritage & Society Faculty A"liate, University of Massachusetts Amherst

David Glassberg, Professor, Department of History, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Rae Gould, Repatriation Coordinator, Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Sophia Labadi, Director, Centre for Heritage, University of Kent, UK

Samuel J. Redman, Assistant Professor, Department of History, Center for Heritage & Society Faculty A"liate, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Pamela K. Stone, Director of the FPR-HC, Culture, Brain, and Development Program, Chair, Committee on Ethics, American Anthropological Association, School of Critical Social Inquiry, Hampshire College

Lisa Wexler, Division Director for Community Health Studies, Associate Professor, Community Health Education, Department of Public Health, School of Public Health and Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

ABOUT THE CENTER FOR HERITAGE & SOCIETYWelcome to the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass) and to the UMass Amherst Center for Heritage and Society (CHS). UMass Amherst is an ideal home for serious, long-term multidisciplinary e$orts to craft new approaches to heritage conservation and communication, both within the United States and abroad. %e Center is a multidisciplinary initiative to craft new approaches to heritage conservation and communication around the world. CHS o$ers research opportunities for scholars working in heritage-related !elds such as archaeology, history, environmental science, landscape architecture and regional planning, European studies, Native American Indian Studies, Afro-American Studies, Classics, legal studies, public health, and public policy. Additionally, the Center provides undergraduate and graduate students with training and experience in heritage planning and management. Our goals are threefold: research, teaching and training, and outreach.

To learn more about the UMass Amherst Center for Heritage and Society, please visit our website: http://www.umass.edu/chs.UMass Amherst Center for Heritage and Society

215 Machmer Hall, University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA 01003phone: 413.577-1605 fax: 413.545.9494

..............................................................................................................Sponsors 2-3............................................................................................Conference Challenge 4

.................................................................................................Conference %emes 5.....................................................................................................Plenary Speakers 6

.........................................................................Registration & Travel Information 7....................................................................................................Accommodations 8

.............................................................................Schedule of Sessions and Events 9.................................................................................................Panel Schedule 10-14

...................................................................................................Campus Map 15-16

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SPONSORS

CENTRE FOR HERITAGE AT KENT (KENT UNIVERSITY, UK)%e Centre for Heritage at Kent (CH@K) is a new interdisciplinary centre that seeks to engage in innovative projects, by working across the boundaries between a variety of academic and professional disciplines, including archaeology, anthropology, geography, physics, heritage conservation and management, architecture and urban planning.

THE JOUKOWSKY INSTITUTE, BROWN UNIVERSITY %e Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World is dedicated to the academic study and public promotion of the archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean, Egypt, and Western Asia (the latter broadly construed as extending from Anatolia and the Levant to the Caucasus, and including the territories of the ancient Near East); our principal research interests lie in the complex societies of the pre-modern era.

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES INSTITUTE, UMASS AMHERST%e Interdisciplinary Studies Institute is a forum for faculty at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to engage with one another in a spirit of intellectual and creative adventure. We host seminars, residencies, and visiting speakers, and work with others to foster interdisciplinary work on campus.

THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SCIENCES, UMASS AMHERST%e School of Public Health and Health Sciences is a national leader in !nding ways to maximize public health and quality of life. %e School addresses complex health issues by integrating traditional core areas of public health with related health science disciplines, fostering a unique environment in which transdisciplinary research collaborations can &ourish.

COLLEGE OF SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, UMASS AMHERST%e College of Social and Behavioral Sciences at UMass Amherst is home to departments and programs leading to the Bachelor of Arts. %e College focuses on behavior and organization from cultural, social, and biological perspectives. Graduates of the College have strong analytic and problem-solving abilities, good human relations skills, and con!dence in their ability to learn and grow in new work situations.

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INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS OFFICE, UMASS AMHERST%e International Programs O"ce supports study abroad students as well as international graduate and undergraduate students and exchange students.

DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND PUBLIC HISTORY PROGRAM, UMASS AMHERST%e History Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst is dedicated to the idea that an understanding of the past is essential to a free and enlightened citizenry. %e nationally-recognized Public History Program brings historical scholarship to the teachers and people of the Commonwealth.

SUSTAINABLE PRESERVATION INITIATIVE%e Sustainable Preservation Initiative (SPI) seeks to save and preserve the world’s cultural heritage by providing transformative and sustainable economic opportunities to poor communities in which archaeological sites are located.

DEPARTMENT OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AND REGIONAL PLANNING, UMASS AMHERST%rough integrative teaching, research, creative work, and outreach, we design and plan sustainable communities and regions. We seek integrative, regenerative, community-based, beautiful solutions to serve the ecological, economic and social needs of human as well as natural systems. Our distinctive academic department enables us to connect spatial and social forms across multiple scales, from the site to the city to the region, and from design to plan to program and policy implementation.

DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY, UMASS AMHERST%e Department of Anthropology was established in 1969.  At the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the Anthropology Department is a four-!eld program, each concerned with one of the main branches of Anthropology: Archaeology, Biological Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology, and Linguistic Anthropology.

MANEY PUBLISHINGManey Publishing is an independent publishing company specializing in academic journals in materials science and engineering, the humanities, and health science. Maney is committed to publishing high quality journals in print and electronic formats that are international in scope and peer-reviewed. With o"ces in Leeds and London in the UK, and in Philadelphia in

North America, Maney publishes extensively for learned societies, universities and professional bodies around the world.

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THE CHALLENGE

Whether on an individual or a societal scale, heritage and wellbeing are often seen as disparate concerns. When heritage is viewed as related to community well-being, its value is often reduced to economic development and tourism, rather than something that might be integral to wellness on a larger scale. But how can the collective remaking of the past in the present play a role in imagining a more sustainable and healthy future?

%e goal of this conference is to explore the application of the past to contemporary and future social challenges, speci!cally sustainability and wellbeing. Given the current focus on climate change, rising sea levels, and the displacement of peoples, the wellness of societies is a critical issue. But until now, heritage has had little to say about the subject. %e conference will explore the relationship between heritage and three interrelated aspects of sustainability and wellbeing. %ey include: (1) Heritage and environment: How can heritage be brought to bear on the problems of environmental sustainability, including changing ecosystems, food security, and dwindling energy resources? (2) Heritage and resilience: How does the past a$ect issues of social sustainability, including community adaptability, cohesion and identity? (3) Heritage and wellness: How do cases of historical trauma, and the processes of continuity and memory relate to physical and mental health of individuals and society?

SPECIFIC TOPICS:

• Heritage and climate change• Historic urban landscapes and sustainability• Social dislocation, trauma, and wellbeing• Slow food and local foodways• Adaptive reuse and green building• Traditional forms of healing• Heritage and “happiness”• Sustainable development• Place attachment and community well-being• Eco-museums and community

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THEMES

HERITAGE AND ENVIRONMENT%e problematic separation of nature and culture in Western ontologies has contributed to an instrumental relationship to the natural world and the attendant problems of environmental degradation, air pollution, and dwindling energy resources. Within heritage policy, this binary is reproduced in the separation of “natural” and “cultural” landscapes in national and international legal frameworks, such as UNESCO’s World Heritage Convention, resulting in the problematic separation of natural and cultural resources in issues of planning and development. More recent calls for &at, “connectivity ontologies” (Harrison 2013) and “multi-naturalist perspectives” (Latour 2004, de Castro 2004) that situate humans and non-humans in interconnected webs or assemblages (Deleuze 2004) o$er a way of broadening discussions of sustainability to encompass human and non-human actors and environments. Papers in this theme will examine how uses of the past in the context of practices such as local foodways, environmental activism, and climate mitigation (wind farms, solar energy, etc.) contribute to the rebuilding of a common world between humans and non-humans, and to environmental sustainability.

HERITAGE AND RESILIENCEA range of scholars have highlighted the ways in which people’s interactions with place can contribute to a sense of group resilience—a perspective often lost when heritage objects, sites and landscapes are assumed to carry their own inherent meanings. Jane Grenville (2007), for example, has highlighted how the built environment provides a sense of “ontological security” that can contribute to a sense of human creativity in the face of social upheaval. Similarly, Michael Herzfeld (2004) has shown how cultural intimacy and vibrant sociability engender local resistance to the monumentalization of social space and neoliberal processes of urban restructuring. Finally, Mindy Fullilove (2005) has charted the “emotional ecosystems” that congeal group solidarity in urban environments, and the traumatic stress or “root shock” that can be brought on by urban renewal. Building on these notions of ontological security, cultural intimacy, and emotional ecosystems, papers in this theme will explore how uses of the past contribute to social sustainability by engendering group resilience and/or resistance to multi-scalar processes of social displacement whether of the environmental, developmental, or neoliberal varieties.

HERITAGE AND WELLNESSJust as the nature-culture divide has narrowed the scope of landscapes to the technical management of natural sites, so too in the !elds of medicine, epidemiology and public health, the study of the factors giving rise to physical and social health have been narrowed to consider risk and protective factors and their relationship to the etiology of disease. Far less attention has been directed at the ways in which place, intergenerational continuity and collective and autobiographical memory a$ect personal and community wellbeing. Research among public health scholars has highlighted correlations between discrete cultural factors such as acculturation stress, historical trauma, and rapid social change and negative health outcomes.[1] Other scholars have pointed to the positive health outcomes associated with enculturation, personal and cultural identity, intergenerational continuity, and civic engagement.[2] How these associations are made possible and the ways in which they “work” are rich areas for interdisciplinary investigations. Papers in this theme will explore the ways in which personal and community interpretations and portrayal of heritage in&uence physical and mental health individually and on a population level, and the broader relationships between culture, identity, ecology and health.

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PLENARY SPEAKERS

MINDY FULLILOVEMindy %ompson Fullilove, MD, is a research psychiatrist at New York State Psychiatric Institute and a professor of clinical psychiatry and sociomedical sciences at Columbia University.  She received her undergraduate education at Bryn Mawr College, went to medical school at Columbia University, and did psychiatric training at NY Hospital-Westchester Division and Monte!ore Hospital.  She is the author of numerous articles and several books.  Her most recent book is "Urban Alchemy: Restoring Joy in America's Sorted Out Cities."

JANE GRENVILLEDr Jane Grenville FSA MIFA IHBC specializes in the archaeology of buildings, heritage policy and the conservation of historic structures. She completed her !rst degree (BA in Archaeology and Anthropology) at Cambridge (1977-80) and holds a PhD from York (2005).  Formerly a 'dirt' archaeologist with extensive !eld experience in the UK, Europe, Syria and Libya, she moved into the world of standing buildings and conservation as a !eld worker on the listed buildings resurvey 1984-7, then researcher for the Rows Research Project in Chester and from 1988-1991 Historic Buildings O"cer for the Council for British Archaeology and an English Heritage Commissioner from 2001-2008. She is the author

of Medieval Housing (1997) and editor of Managing the Historic Rural Landscape (1999). She chairs of the Casework Committee of the Council for British Archaeology and a Trustee of York Civic Trust.

RODNEY HARRISONRodney Harrison is a Reader in Archaeology, Heritage and Museum Studies at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. Prior to his present position he was Senior Lecturer in Heritage Studies at the Open University, where he was responsible for directing a programme of teaching, research and broadcasting in global heritage studies. He has a range of experience working, teaching and researching across the !elds of natural and cultural heritage in Australia, the US and UK. His research engages the material histories of colonialism and heritage, archaeologies of the present, the uses of the past in contemporary societies, and the relationship between heritage and the future.  He is the founding editor of the Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, Chair of the Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in %eory (CHAT) group, and a founding member of the International Association of Critical Heritage Studies. His books include Heritage: Critical Approaches (Routledge, 2013), Reassembling the Collection (co-edited; SAR Press, 2013), Unpacking the

Collection (co-edited; Springer, 2011) and Understanding the Politics of Heritage (edited, Manchester University Press, 2010).

MICHAEL HERZFELD Michael Herzfeld is Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences in the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University, where has taught since 1991. He is an honorary professor of Shandong University, China, and Senior Adviser to the Critical Heritage Studies Initiative of the International Institute for Asian Studies, and holds honorary doctorates from the Université Libre de Bruxelles and the Universities of Macedonia (%essaloniki) and Crete. %e author of ten books – including A Place in History (1991), Cultural Intimacy (2nd ed., 2005), %e Body Impolitic (2004), and Evicted from Eternity (2009) – and numerous articles and reviews, he has also produced two !lms (Monti Moments [2007] and Roman Restaurant Rhythms [2011]). He served as editor of American Ethnologist (1995-98) and is currently editor-at-large at Anthropological Quarterly. His most recent research in Greece, Italy, and %ailand addresses the impact of historic conservation and gentri!cation, nationalism and crypto-colonialism, and the ethnography of knowledge among artisans and intellectuals.

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REGISTRATION & TRAVEL INFORMATION

Please note that presenters must register by March 15, 2014 in order to guarantee their place on the conference program. Registration includes conference attendance and program, co$ee breaks, and the opening and closing receptions. %ere will be an optional banquet dinner held on May 15 and lunch options available on campus.

Registration is now open at:https://regstg.com/Registration/Registration.aspx?rid=229bcb87-90da-4048-8f4e-195123243bec 

LOCAL AREA TRANSPORTATION !%e local public bus transportation line is PVTA: http://www.pvta.com Taxi service is available from GoGreen Cab and Tik Tak Taxi.

CHILD CARE !!Individuals in the Amherst area willing to provide baby-sitting can be found via Sitter city (http://

www.sittercity.com/babysitters/ma/amherst.html), an organization that works in partnership with the American Red Cross and provides information on background checks, reviews from past clients, rates charged by sitters, and other important details.

TRAVELLING TO CAMPUS !!If you are traveling to Amherst by plane, the closest airport is Bradley International in Windsor Locks,

Connecticut (near Hartford). %is airport is approximately 45 miles from the UMass campus. Logan Airport in Boston is approximately 90 miles from the UMass Campus. Both airports feature car rental agencies. %ere are also shuttles available from Valley Transporter (800-872-8752) and Seemo Shuttle (413-586-1120).

To !nd more details about traveling to campus by plane, bus, rail, and car, please visit:http://www.umass.edu/visitorsctr/directions

%ose looking to share rides from Hartford/Bradley International Airport can post here.

REGISTRATION TYPE PROFESSIONAL STUDENTRegular: before May 1 $260 $155Late: on or after May 1 $290 $190May 15 banquet dinner $55 $40

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In addition to the Campus Center Hotel, there are other local options available. It is strongly recommended that you book your room early, as some of the nearby colleges will be holding commencement ceremonies that overlap with our conference dates. %e Campus Center Hotel is located directly on the campus of the University of Massachusetts in the same building as the conference sessions. %e Holiday Inn Express and Howard Johnson are a short distance from campus by car or bus.

HOTEL UMASSHotel Website: www.umasshotel.comHotel Phone Number: 877-822-2110 or 413-549-6000 Conference Code: AD14C Rates: $119 (plus tax) per nightBlock rate is available until April 15, 2014, or until all rooms in the block have been reserved.

HOWARD JOHNSONHotel Website: http://www.hojo.com/HowardJohnson/control/Booking/property_info?

propertyId=00678&brandInfo=HJHotel Phone Number: 413-586-0114

UNIVERSITY LODGEHotel Website: http://www.hampshirehospitality.com/universitylodge/university_lodge.htmlHotel Phone Number: 413-256-8111

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESSHotel Website: http://www.hiexpress.com/hotels/us/en/hadley/hdlma/hoteldetailHotel Phone Number: 413-582-0002

SHARE A ROOM %ose looking to share a hotel room can post here.

OTHER OPTIONSFor information on additional accommodation options in the Amherst area please visit: http://www.umass.edu/visitorsctr/Area_Accomodations

ACCOMMODATIONS

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SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS AND EVENTS*

WEDNESDAY MAY 14, 2014WEDNESDAY MAY 14, 2014

11:00-1:00 Registration, UMass Campus Center Foyer**12:30-1:00 Welcoming Remarks, room 163C1:00-3:00 Plenary, room 163C3:30-4:00 Break4:00-5:30 Simultaneous Sessions5:30-6:30 Reception, Hadley Room

THURSDAY MAY 15, 2014THURSDAY MAY 15, 2014

8:30-10:00 Plenary, room 163C10:00-10:30 Break and Poster Sessions10:30-12:00 Simultaneous Sessions12:00-1:30 Break 1:30-3:00 Plenary, room 163C3:00-3:30 Break 3:30-6:00 Simultaneous Sessions7:00-8:30 Dinner (advance registration required) Amherst Room

FRIDAY MAY 16, 2014FRIDAY MAY 16, 2014

8:30-10:30 Simultaneous Sessions10:30-11:00 Break11:00-12:30 Plenary, room 163C12:30-2:00 Break 2:00-5:00 Simultaneous Sessions5:00-6:00 Closing Reception, Hadley Room* Preliminary Schedule - subject to change**For registration after this time, please follow the signs to Conference Services on the 9th &oor of the Campus Center.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14th

12:30pm - 1:00pm 163CWelcoming RemarksElizabeth Chilton, Director of the Center for Heritage & Society, UMass Amherst, USA

Sophia Labadi, Centre for Heritage at Kent, Kent University, UK

Welcoming RemarksElizabeth Chilton, Director of the Center for Heritage & Society, UMass Amherst, USA

Sophia Labadi, Centre for Heritage at Kent, Kent University, UK

1:00pm - 3:30pm 163CPlenary: Heritage and the Right to the City: When Securing the Past Creates Insecurity in the PresentMichael Herzfeld, Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, USA

Plenary: Heritage and the Right to the City: When Securing the Past Creates Insecurity in the PresentMichael Herzfeld, Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, USA

3:30pm-4:00pmBreakBreak

4:00pm - 5:30pm 163CHeritage and the ‘Ontological’ Turn: !e Politics of Materiality and the Enactment of Collective PastsSession Organizers: Matthew J. Hill and John Collins

Heritage and the ‘Ontological’ Turn: !e Politics of Materiality and the Enactment of Collective PastsSession Organizers: Matthew J. Hill and John Collins

When Intangible Heritage is a Material %ing, or, How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Destruction of Archaeological Sites (Sort Of ).Fernando Armstrong-Fumero, Smith College, USAGrasping Cacophony in Bolivia’s Heritage RushMichelle Bigenho, Colgate University, USA, and Henry Stobart, Royal Holloway University of London, UK

4:00pm - 5:30pm 168CMuseums, Community Heritage, and WellbeingMuseums, Community Heritage, and Wellbeing

Community Identity and the ‘Impossibility’ of World Heritage: %e Case of Göreme Open-Air MuseumElizabeth Carnegie, University of She!eld, UKHazel Tucker, University of Otago, New ZealandCommunity, Authority and Heritage: Local Museums as Arenas of Competition and NegotiationNelly M. Robles Garcia, Harvard University and National Institute of Anthropology and History, MexicoJack Corbett, Portland State University, USARe-Interpreting the Dangerous Crop: Tobacco Agriculture as Heritage in Eastern TaiwanHan-Hsiu Chen, Aberystwyth University, UK

Local Aesthetic Practices in National and International Heritage Regulation of Antigua GuatemalaWalter E. Little, SUNY Albany, USA%e Politics of Hair as New Materiality: Reassembling the Historic City as Dissensus in Old HavanaMatthew J Hill, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA, and Maki Tanaka, UC-Cuba Academic InitiativeCapacities of and Capacitating the Human in the “Cradle of Brazil”John F Collins, Queens College, CUNY, USASi esta ollita tuviera vida les contaría todo;  Memory versus Heritage and Object Centered OntologiesAmy Groleau, Colgate University, USA

Living Museum: “Maloca” (Indian Longhouse) as Indigenous KnowledgeDinah P. Guimareans, University Federal Fluminense, Brazil

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5:30pm-6:30pm Hadley Room, 10th Floor

THURSDAY, MAY 15th 8:30am - 10:00am 163CPlenary: Can’t We All Just Get Along and Plan to Stay?Mindy Fullilove, Research Psychiatrist, New York State Psychiatric Institute, and Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University, USA

Plenary: Can’t We All Just Get Along and Plan to Stay?Mindy Fullilove, Research Psychiatrist, New York State Psychiatric Institute, and Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University, USA

10:00am-10:30amBreak and Poster Session in LobbyBreak and Poster Session in LobbyCommunity, Con&ict, and Archaeology in Acre, IsraelEmma Heidtman, University of Rhode Island, USA

Community, Con&ict, and Archaeology in Acre, IsraelEmma Heidtman, University of Rhode Island, USA

10:30am - 12:00pm 163CReclaiming and Renewing Heritage CommonsReclaiming and Renewing Heritage Commons

Re-creating Amazonian Dark Earth as Commons with Earth OthersFrederique Ap"el-Marglin, Wesleyan University, USA

10:30pm - 12:00pm 168 CHeritage and Health in Indigenous/Traditional Communities, Part 1Heritage and Health in Indigenous/Traditional Communities, Part 1

Authorized Heritage as Structural Violence: A Case Study of Disenfranchisement in British Columbia’s West KootenayErica Kowsz, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USAAuthorized Heritage Discourse and the Triangle of Health in PeruJessica D. Smeeks, SUNY Binghamton, USARemembering where they sat: the making and remaking of an Aboriginal placeChris A.N. Johnston, Context Pty Ltd & Deakin University, Australia ‘Country’ in the City: Connecting Canberra’s CommunitiesMarilyn C. Truscott, University of Canberra, Australia

It Can be Helped: Survivor Docent Testimony as Transitional Justice at the Japanese American National MuseumRaina Fox, Brown University, USACommunity Hubs of Wellbeing – Using Community Character to Build Wellbeing at ScaleMargot McInnes, Government of South Australia, Australia

Troubling %e Anthropocene: Global/local Dynamics And Archaeology As Urban Place-making ActivityStephen Berquist, University Of Toronto, CanadaShared Heritage Care- Multi-disciplinary Approach in Cultural HeritageAnn V. Hardy, University of Newcastle, Australia%e Role of Traditional Sustainability in Urban Heritage Sites: %e Case of Water Management in Jeddah, Saudi ArabiaAmir Habibullah, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA

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Optional Dinner(advance registration required)

12:00pm - 1:30pmBreakBreak

1:30pm - 3:00pm 163CPlenary: Ontological Security Re-visitedJane C. Grenville, Senior Lecturer in Archaeology, University of York, UK

Plenary: Ontological Security Re-visitedJane C. Grenville, Senior Lecturer in Archaeology, University of York, UK

3:00pm - 3:30pmBreakBreak

3:30pm - 6:00pm 163CMaking More Just Futures through HeritageMaking More Just Futures through Heritage

‘Heritage Syndromes’ - Wellbeing in the Making of ‘Just’ FuturesBeverly Butler, Institute of Archaeology, University College London, UK

Well-being and Heritage: Towards a New ParadigmAndreas Pantazatos, University of Durham, UKTransdisciplinary Exploration Of Heritage And Wellness – Intersections With Caring ScienceChristen Erlingsson, Linnaeus University, SwedenHeritage, health and the ageing populationTine Fristrup, Aarhus University, DenmarkIdentity Work at Heritage Sites: A Stepping Stone to Intercultural Understanding and Peace?Nicole Deufel, Institute of Archaeology, University College London, UKStrengthening the Resilience of Societies: Beyond the Conservation EthicsCornelius Holtorf, Linnaeus University, Sweden

3:30pm - 6:00pm 168CCon!ict and Recovery of HeritageCon!ict and Recovery of Heritage

Cultural Trauma and Heritage: %e Impacts of War, Occupation and Ethnic CleansingElizabeth Brabec, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Politics of Emotion in Heritage WorksFeras Hammami, University of Gothenburg, SwedenRebuilding the Nation in Mali after the 2012 Crisis: A Critical Analysis of Cultural Heritage as a Social ResourceJ. Henrike J. Florusboch, Leiden University, NetherlandsIntangible Heritage: A Path for Engendering Group Resilience and a Provider of Ontological Security for CommunitiesAlin Rus, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USAInterpreting heritage of divided cities: %e Bu$er Zone in Nicosia and the consequences of displacement on social sustainability and resilienceEvdoxia Apostolou, University of Leicester, UK

7:00pm-8:30pm Amherst Room, Floor 10

FRIDAY, MAY 16th

8:30pm - 10:30pm 168CHeritage and Health in Indigenous/Traditional Communities, Part 2Heritage and Health in Indigenous/Traditional Communities, Part 2

Museums, Migrants and Socio-Economic Human Rights: strategies for building just futures in EuropeSophia Labadi, Centre for Heritage at Kent, UK

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"Heritage" As a Pathway to the Embodiment of Disease: A Case Study of Obesity in the Choctaw Nation of OklahomaKasey Jernigan, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA#omas L. Leatherman, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USAViolence, Displacement and a Shamanic Heritage Project: %e Resilience of the Siona Indians of the Putumayo Region in ColombiaEsther Jean Langdon, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, BrazilLinking Generations And Fostering Resilience %rough Traditional Stories In An Inupiaq CommunityLisa Wexler, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USAJoshua Moses, Haverford College, USAHeritage and Health in a Gullah Community: Research Perspectives and Community ActionEmily L. Moore, Medical University of South Carolina, USAJ. Herman Blake, Medical University of South Carolina, USAChallenging Chronic Disease in the South Carolina LowCountryJ. Herman Blake, Medical University of South Carolina, USAEmory Shaw Campbell, Gullah Heritage Consulting Services, USA

8:30am - 10:30am 163CCultural Tourism and SustainabilityCultural Tourism and Sustainability

Place Attachment, Tourism, and Community Wellbeing in Desa Adat Jimbaran, Bali, IndonesiaLuh Micke Anggraini, University of Western Sydney, Australia

10:30am-11:00amBreakBreak

11:00am - 12:30pm 163CPlenary: Heritage after Nature/Culture: Towards an Ontological Politics of Heritage in the Age of AnthropoceneRodney Harrison, Reader in Archaeology, Heritage and Museum Studies, Institute of Archaeology,University College London, UK

Plenary: Heritage after Nature/Culture: Towards an Ontological Politics of Heritage in the Age of AnthropoceneRodney Harrison, Reader in Archaeology, Heritage and Museum Studies, Institute of Archaeology,University College London, UK

12:30pm - 2:00pmBreakBreak

2:00pm - 5:00pm 163CLiving Cultural Heritage at the CrossroadsLiving Cultural Heritage at the Crossroads

Heritage Tourism in the Bahamas: A Case Study of Economic Well-beingElena M. Sesma, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USAHeritage Conservation And Tourism: An Integrated Approach To Resilience In Alcatraz IslandCarolina Manrique, Texas A&M University, USACultural tourism and sustainability in the "Pueblos Mágicos" of MexicoClaudia Rodríguez, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, MexicoErika Elizabeth Pérez, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, Mexico

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Closing Reception

Designing and Implementing Programs at the Intersection of Living Cultural Heritage and HealthAmy Kitchener, Alliance for California Traditional Arts, USAHeritage and Community: Funding Non-traditional, Holistic Approaches to Sustainable PreservationBen S. #omas, Archaeological Institute of America, USAMeredith A. Langlitz, Archaeological Institute of America, USAWhat does Heritage mean in the Anthropocene? Merging Culture, Nature and the Public Good in the New EpochBarbara Little, University of Maryland – College Park, USACan Digging Make You Happy? Connectivity, Wellbeing and HeritageFaye A. Sayer, Manchester Metropolitan University, UKDoes Heritage Work as a Tool for Community Well-being?Michael E. Roberts RPA, #oth Communications Services, USAHabitat, Heritage and its Psychological Meaning: %e Use of Psychology Concepts on Heritage IssuesMikael Hammelev Jörgensen, Uppsala University, Campus Gotland, SwedenClimate Change "Co-Opera" John Ungerleider, SIT Graduate Institute, USA

2:00pm - 5:00pm 168CConserving Cultural Landscapes: Challenges and OpportunitiesConserving Cultural Landscapes: Challenges and Opportunities

Historic Landscapes of the River Sava within Croatia: Sustainability and ProtectionDrazen Arbutina, Zagreb University of Applied Sciences, Croatia

Historic Landscapes of the River Sava within Croatia: Sustainability and ProtectionDrazen Arbutina, Zagreb University of Applied Sciences, Croatia

Facing Rural Shrinkage with Heritage-based Planning Strategies: A Case from DenmarkAnne Tietjen, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkHistoric Parallels in Preserving Cultural and Natural Heritage in the United StatesMeredith Anderson Langlitz, Archaeological Institute of American and Boston University, USAOld Greek Farms, New Immigrant Farmers, and Neo-Rural Development in the Global Countrysides of GreeceJames P. Verinis, Binghampton University, USACommunity, Authority and Heritage: Local Museums as Arenas of Competition and NegotiationNelly M. Robles Garcia, Harvard University and National Institute of Anthropology and History, MexicoJack Corbett, Portland State University, USA%e Dolomites As “Global Point Of Reference For %e Aesthetics Of %e Sublime” – But Where Are %e People?Emanuel Valentin, Free University Of Bozen-Bolzano, ItalyFrom Cultural Landscape to OrgscapeJack Corbett, Portland State University, USANelly Robles Garcia, Harvard University and National Institute of Anthropology and History, MexicoHeritage Discourses And %e Aspirations For A Better Everyday Life: Observations On 'missed Opportunities' And 'promising Initiatives' In Upper Mustang, NepalNeel Kamal Chapagain, Ahmedabad University, IndiaEducation and Environmental Sustainability in Chiapas Indigenous CommunitiesMarta Vicarelli, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

5:00pm - 6:00pm Hadley Room, 10th Floor

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PVTA Bus StopsMetered/Public Parking

Studio Arts Bldg

General Location Campus MapJanuary 2014 printed twice a year with updates

For the more detailed campus map, please visit:https://go.umass.edu/map/Robsham Memorial Visitors Center - (413) 545-0306

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Integrated Science Bldg

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